Properties sales fall in Derbyshire as political uncertainty puts buyers off

Embargoed to 0001 Saturday April 15''File photo dated 19/01/16 of terraced houses. Homes across Britain have seen �29 billion shaved off their total value since the start of the year, according to a website. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Saturday April 15, 2017. Zoopla said homes across the UK are now valued at �7.93 trillion in total - down �29 billion since the start of 2017. See PA story MONEY Property. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

The number of properties sold in Derbyshire this year has fallen, as political uncertainty puts off potential buyers.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said that constraints on affordability have also affected buyers, following significant rises in the cost of properties in recent years.

Up to the end of July, the most recent month for which data is available, 6,996 properties had been sold in Derbyshire.

It is an 8% drop compared to the same seven months in 2017, a picture reflected across the East Midlands, where sales were also 8% down.

Across the UK, sales were lower in each month to July than in the corresponding 2017 month, and were down by 9% in total.

Simon Rubinsohn, chief economist at RICS, said: “Uncertainty about the economic outlook on the back of the never-ending Brexit negotiations has become an increasing drag on transaction activity in the housing market.

“The mood music amongst buyers has also been impacted by affordability constraints as hefty price gains over recent years have pushed ever higher the size of required deposits.”

The Government has encouraged the building of new homes to help deal with the housing supply, with an aim of developing 300,000 new properties a year nationwide.

It has also encouraged first-time buyers to purchase new builds. Its Help to Buy scheme offers favourable saving rates for first-time purchasers, and equity loans or shared ownership schemes at the time of purchase.

But between January and July, just 635 new homes were sold in Derbyshire, 30% fewer than in the same period last year.

Second-hand property sales also decreased by 5% to 6,361.

Mr Rubinsohn said: “The Government’s Help to Buy scheme has provided some support for the new build sector but this has left the second-hand segment even more exposed.

“On top of this, a lack of stock for the sale in this part of this market has compounded the problem. Existing home-owners are staying put for longer meaning there is less property available for prospective purchasers to view.

“Meanwhile, in the background is the concern that the cost of mortgage finance is likely in due course to become dearer.”

While sales volumes have dropped, house prices in Derbyshire have increasedelse{House prices have also dropped in Derbyshire alongside sales volume. The average property sold for £177,258 in September, 4% more than a year previously.